Half-a-Loaf Growth

At a time of lackluster economic growth, countries around the world are attempting to devise and implement strategies to spur and sustain recovery. The key word is strategy: to succeed, policymakers must ensure that measures are implemented in reasonably complete packages.

MILAN – At a time of lackluster economic growth, countries around the world are attempting to devise and implement strategies to spur and sustain recovery. The key word is strategy: to succeed, policymakers must ensure that measures to open the economy, boost public investment, enhance macroeconomic stability, and increase reliance on markets and incentives for resource allocation are implemented in reasonably complete packages. Pursuing only some of these objectives produces distinctly inferior results.

China provides a telling example. Before Deng Xiaoping launched the policy of “reform and opening up” in 1978, the country had relatively high levels of public-sector investment. But the centrally planned economy lacked market incentives and was largely closed to the global economy’s major markets for goods, investment, and technology. As a result, returns on public investment were modest, and China’s economic performance was mediocre.

China’s economic transformation began with the introduction in the 1980s of market incentives in the agricultural sector. These reforms were followed by a gradual opening to the global economy, a process that accelerated in the early 1990s. Economic growth surged ahead, and returns on public investment soared, reaching an annual growth rate above 9% of GDP, shortly after the reforms were implemented.

Michael Spence, a Nobel laureate in economics, is Professor of Economics at NYU’s Stern School of Business, Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, Advisory Board Co-Chair of the Asia Global Institute in Hong Kong, and Chair of the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council on New Growth Models. He was the chairman of the independent Commission on Growth and Development, an international body that from 2006-2010 analyzed opportunities for global economic growth, and is the author of The Next Convergence – The Future of Economic Growth in a Multispeed World.

Back in 50th-60th last century most of developing countries were facing similar problems.Developing world these days is much more diverse. It's a majot challenge now for developing agencies (IFIs, UNDP and etc.), which also evolved back in 50th last century, not to suggest universal prescriptions, but to understand 'the dynamics of development', to accept that development is as a process.
https://undp.unteamworks.org/node/459177

Sir Spence,
Your note concerning the growth is pretty encouraging for the contribution that supplies to the European reformism.
Unfortunately, unlike as it is theorized by the European policy makers few years ago, little improvements have been effectively implemented within the European Community. (Hereafter EU).

In the recent years, Germany has overwhelmingly abused of its bargaining power in imposing the belief of the Austerity throughout Europe and to the European Citizens. A suitable example is the awkward behavior assumed by the German politics in managing the Maastricht treaty which has been partially blamed of locking the stimulus for the growth.

Being an investment strategist, that one I have always wondered, concerns the unsolvable problem of the fiscal convergence never issued in the European Monetary Union. My very simplified thought is justified enough by the so called “fiscal arbitrage” among the Countries that either belong to the EMU or to the CEE. (i.e Luxembourg is a fair example of, as well as Ireland with its green zone, but on top of the list, the hit remains the case of Italian Swiss dispute on the disclosure of the owners of the bank accounts held by the Swiss banks which remains an open issue).

From an unified point of view, I would like to ask you a personal judgment about the resolution of the export issue which is affecting the European Union since Germany is not abiding by the Macroeconomic imbalance procedure for the last 3 years.

Don’t you believe that such a bad German attitude will seriously damage the commercial balance-sheet of the remaining European players who have lost the opportunity to boost their economy by exploiting the export momentum?

Bringing ahead the discussion, another interesting point raised in your article is referred to the market incentive for the public investments to be underpinned to grant to the Europe to get rid of the recessive spiral. Well, both Europe and Italy have allocated plenty of public spending for the public investments such as Lion-Torino (TAV project, as well as the Mestre bridge or, to close the loop, the project developed close to the Rhine river.).
In fulfilling these tasks, an important financial aid is provided by the European Investment Bank (BEI), whose investment plans have allowed the BEI itself to sign a remarkable project with the Italian Government to finance the project dubbed “Passante di Mestre” allegedly 350 Mln of €.

From my historical experience, albeit such projects are useful for sustaining the national growth, for the time being have not promoted any hoped effect. My skepticism is due to the delays and to the bureaucracy to be respected for getting the needed licenses to start building the projects themselves.

I would end up my post with a common advice to be delivered to the European politicians and that regards the effort to be undertaken in streamlining the bureaucracy to speed up and achieve the so hoped sustainable growth. Without any anti-corruption policy the progresses done by the European Parliament will be converted into a burden for Europe rather than an opportunity.
On top of that, nowadays the economic development is put in place by looking at the energy efficiency, by paying attention to the preservation of the global ecosystem, which means to put in place strategic investments needed for mitigate the climate changes that are undermining the Earth.
Maybe it’s time to orient the economic growth topics toward both the new structural and sustainable development targets such as the work flexibility and the climate change prevention.

Michael Spence describes so well the concept of 'half a loaf growth', one which would be meaningful for income mobility; private investments have failed to achieve this denouement given its complete lack of focus on the human side of the problem, namely building the human capital.
Half a loaf growth should focus on creating engineers, doctors, teachers, people engaged in public works, or simple mass of trained people who can make things, who have been replaced now by 'smart's.

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